Facilities
West Virginia University
WVU is a Land Grant University with approximately
30,000 students. The Constructed Facility Center is a research,
development and implementation entity located in the College of
Engineering and Mineral Resources. Founded in 1988 through partial
support from NSF, the WVU-CFC has become a leader in composite
research and applications. WVU-CFC is unique for its ability to
convert existing technology from a wide variety of sources to
technologies having an immediate impact on the Nation's constructed
facilities. The mission of WVU-CFC is to foster and conduct R&D
vital to advancing new materials and new nondestructive evaluation
(NDE) techniques and to promote and implement advanced FRP
composites for civil and military infrastructure applications
(http://www.cemr.wvu.edu/cfc/).
WVU-CFC's ability to adapt rapidly to changing
research needs, allows them to study emerging technologies and adapt
these technologies to create new products such as fiber composite
materials, diagnostic tools, design procedures, or new structural
components. A second distinguishing feature is their close-working
relationship with the owners of our Nation's constructed facilities.
Much of their work is conducted in cooperation with chemical,
manufacturing and construction industry, highway agencies and other
government agencies. Through joint projects and continuing
education, the WVU-CFC is in frequent contact with practicing
engineers. WVU-CFC researchers have authored over 500 journal and
peer-reviewed conference publications in the last 10 years. Of
these, many involved research that required close collaboration with
industry. Funding for these studies has come from a variety of
sources, including USDOT-FHWA and FRA, USDOE, USDA, USDOD-ONR,
WVDOT-DOH, WVDA, industrial sources and the NSF Civil and Mechanical
Systems and Educational Divisions.
WVU-CFC has the following material processing,
composite fabrication and testing equipment at its discretion: 1)
Battenfeld Injection Molding Machine BA 1000 CDC/315; 2) Plastech
RTM Machine Megaject Sprint; 3) PHI Compression Molding Machines; 4)
High Temperature (~400F) Resin Infusion; 5) Brabender Twin Screw
Extruder D6/2 with Pellelizer; 6) Rheometric Scientific DMTA; 7)
Dynisco Melt Flow Indexer LMI D4002; 8) Instron Testing Machines
Model 1011 and Model 8501 with Thermal Chambers; 9) Satec BLI Izod
Impact Testing Machine; 10) Instron Shore's Hardness Tester; 11)
Rheometric Mechanical Spectrometer -RMS800; 12) TA Instruments DSC
910; 13) TA TGA; 14) Guided Heat Flow Meter ANTER Unitherm model
2022 thermal conductivity testing system and Netzsch Dilatometer CTE
testing system; 15) Various strain data collection devices including
data acquisition system; 16) wide range of fatigue testing
equipment; 17) Micromaster Microscope; 18) Hitachi SEM S-4700; 19)
Panalytical X-ray Diffractometer; 20) Varian NMR Spectrometer. XRD
and TEM at NETL - US DOE (Morgantown, WV) and Medical Center -WVU
are also available to CFC researchers.
WVU-CFC has three large, high bay testing
laboratories with heavy duty cranes, loading dock, and storage
space, where structural members, such as columns and beams, can be
tested. Some of the available structural testing equipment includes
two advanced laser systems for 2-D deflection measurement under
dynamic and wind loads, a column- buckling machine up to 110 kips
capacity, a combined torsion, bending and shear frame for samples up
to 10 ft in length, several other frames and actuators from 100 kips
up to 300 kips, three MTS servo-hydraulic fatigue testing systems,
and one programmable Thermotron environmental chamber 8x12x8 ft with
mechanical loading access.
WVU-CFC, through grants and contracts, receives
on average $1 to $1.5 million a year in research funding through a
multi-disciplinary team of faculty, academic professionals and staff
from the Departments of Civil and Environmental Engineering (CEE),
Chemical Engineering (ChE), Industrial and Management Systems
Engineering (IMSE), Mechanical and Aerospace Engineering (MAE) and
Lane Department of Computer Science and Electrical Engineering
(LCSEE). A list of key personnel at WVU-CFC is included in the
Supplemental Documents.
North Carolina State University
The Constructed Facilities Laboratory (CFL) is a
sophisticated structure with specially designed reaction floors and
walls to support three-dimensional loading. It houses facilities
devoted to the development and testing of innovations to improve the
public and private constructed infrastructure such as highways,
bridges, industrial plants, buildings, and residences. Improved
infrastructure is critical for sustaining economic development and
for protecting the public from natural hazards like hurricanes and
earthquakes. At the CFL, innovations in construction materials,
construction techniques, and analysis and design methods can be
developed and tested with prototypes and hands-on experiments as
well as computer simulations. This integrated research laboratory
includes several components including a large structural systems
laboratory which is supported by fabrication and machining
facilities, electronics and instrumentation facilities and computer
facilities for simulation and data analysis.
The Large Structural Systems Laboratory, has
4,500 square feet of reaction floor space and is supported by a
fabrication and machine shop. The laboratory allows CFL researchers
to develop and evaluate a broad range of conventional and advanced
composite materials such as fiber reinforced polymer (FRP)
composites, conventional and high-strength concrete;
high-performance fiber-reinforced concrete, steel, wood, and masonry
as well as large-scale structural systems exposed to static,
fatigue, and seismic types of loading. The laboratory is served by
two 20-ton overhead cranes. It is fitted with hydraulic pressure
lines connected to a 100-gallon/minute capacity hydraulic pump,
compressed air lines, outlets to a computer network for data
collection, and appropriate electrical service.
The reaction floor is a 13-foot-thick cellular
box, which is about 120 feet long by 40 feet wide. It is
complemented by one fixed and one modular 25-foot-high reaction
wall. This configuration allows testing of large structural systems
under one or two directional horizontal loading. State-of-the-art
apparatuses for testing high-strength materials and large-scale
structural systems are also available, including: 1) Four
reconfigurable test frames with up to 2000-kip force capacity and up
to a 20-foot vertical clearance; 2) One column-testing frame with a
400-kip force capacity and 25-foot vertical clearance; 3) A
closed-loop computer-controlled testing system with a series of two
22-, 55-, 110-, 220- and 440-kip actuators capable of applying both
static and dynamic loading, with displacement ranges up to 40 inches
for the 440-kip actuators; 4) A 2000-kip Baldwin-MTS closed-loop
compression machine with "high temperature/high pressure"
capability; 5) A 220-kip MTS closed-loop universal testing machine;
and 6) A 20-kip Sintech-MTS computer-controlled materials testing
machine.
The fabrication and machining facilities are adjacent to the Large
Structural Systems Laboratory and are fully equipped with milling,
lathe and welding facilities. The Electronics and
Instrumentation Shop has a variety of instrumentation for testing
materials and large-scale systems. The laboratory also houses four
high-speed data acquisition systems to record necessary test data.
The Engineering Research Services Division
provides additional campus support to the CFL, including a precision
machine shop, an electronic shop, and an analytical instrumentation
facility. The department of Civil, Construction and Environmental
Engineering also has additional laboratories for educational and
research activity, including structural mechanics, structural
behavior measurements, non-destructive testing, construction
automation and robotics, asphalt materials and pavements,
construction systems, hydraulic engineering and environmental
engineering.
Computing facilities that can be accessed from
the CFL include state-of-the-art workstations that form part of the
EOS distributed systems within the College of Engineering. EOS uses
technology developed for project Athena at MIT, which provides a
robust, centrally managed system of commercial and academic
engineering software tools. These include analysis and simulation
software (ANSYS, SIMAN, SLAM), CAD systems (AUTOCAD, CADkey,
CADRAIII), mathematical software (MATLAB, MAPLE, SAS), as well as
numerous word processors, graphic packages and compilers. A list of
key personnel at NCSU is included in the Supplemental
Documents.
University of Miami
The University of Miami is a private
institution of Florida, with a student population of approximately
15,500. This center node is headquartered at the University of
Miami's Department of Civil, Architectural, and Environmental
Engineering. The University of Miami, College of
Engineering, Structures and Materials Laboratory (SML) is an
integrated educational, research and testing service facility,
dedicated to conduct applied and fundamental research through
testing and analysis of construction materials and structural
systems. The SML operates as a testing facility has met the
requirements of the International Accreditation Service (IAS) AC89
"Accreditation Criteria for Testing Laboratories;" and has
demonstrated compliance with ANSI/ISO/IEC Standard 17025:2005
"General requirements for the competence of testing and
calibration laboratories." The SML is equipped with a variety of
test frames and actuators for structural and material testing
under static, dynamic and sustained loads. Extensive data
acquisition capabilities are provided for both laboratory and
field testing, in combination with a large inventory of
measurement sensors.
Additionally, a 3,000 sq. ft. rapid prototyping
facility is equipped to handle the most complex prototyping tasks.
It includes two CNC machine capable of 5-axis milling and turning,
an Alaris30U rapid prototyping machine capable of prototyping
mechanisms, modern sheet metal and wood working equipment and a
complete welding department. This facility can provide support for
the fabrication of custom equipment, test specimens and set-ups as
needed.
Nanjing Tech University
The Nanjing Tech- Advanced Engineering Composites
Research Center is accommodated in three (3) dedicated buildings
including one 3 story office building and two research buildings
(Figure 9) and operates well equipped Composite Structures
Laboratory and Modern Timber Structures Laboratory, in addition to
the Jiangsu Province Key Lab of Civil Engineering and Disaster
Mitigation.
Nanjing Tech-AECRC has the following material
processing, composite fabrication, and testing equipment at its
discretion: 1) VARTM machine; 2) Spraying equipment; 3) Pultrusion
machine; 4) Winding equipment; 5) Electronic universal testing
machine; 6) 300T MTS fatigue test setup; 7) Salt spray corrosion
test device; 8) UV-resistant climate testing machine; 9) Computing
workstations equipped with a number of outstanding analysis
software, such as ABAQUS, ANSYS / DYNA, SAP2000, MIDAS, and so on;
10) TA Rheometer; 11) NETZSCH Differential Scanning Calorimeter
(DSC) 200F3; 12) NETZSCH Thermogravimetric Analyzer (TGA); 13) Gel
Permeation Chromatography (GPC); 14) Fluorescence Spectrophotometer;
15) Thermo- Nicolet Nexus 6700 FTIR-Raman Spectrometer; 16)
Transmission Electron Microscopy (TEM); 17) Field Emission Scanning
Electron Microscope (SEM); 18) Scanning Electron Microscope; 19)
X-ray diffraction (XRD); 20) Twin screw extruder; 21) Drum mixer;
22) Vertical burning tester for foam, and 23) many others.
University of Texas at Arlington
The Structural Research Laboratory (SRL) is a
research facility located in the Civil Engineering Laboratory
Building (CELB) of the College of Engineering at the University of
Texas at Arlington. The SRL has the capability to test full-scale
structural components and systems. It occupies 12,000 square feet of
space and includes a 50 ft. x 24 ft. reaction floor (36-in. thick
heavily reinforced concrete slab), enabling the testing of full-size
structures and components. The SRL is also served by a 15-ton
capacity overhead crane.
Major equipment includes a 400-kip universal
testing machine, several 200-ton load cells, and two actuators
(100-kip and 400-kip) with the required consoles, pumps, and
fixtures. The SRL is also equipped with a 400-ton reaction frame and
multi-channel microcomputer-controlled data acquisition systems. The
hydraulic actuators can be programmed to induce a dynamic load for
seismic testing of structures. An assortment of equipment is
available to measure applied loads, including pressure transducers,
load cells, and single and double acting hydraulic cylinders with
hand pumps. An assortment of displacement transducers, including
linear variable differential transducers (LVDTs), linear
potentiometers, and wire potentiometers, with capacities ranging
from 2-in. to 20-in. are available.
UTA has extensive research capabilities to
perform large scale strength and durability testing. UTA
geotechnical laboratories house two pieces of repeated load cyclic
triaxial test equipment and two others with unsaturated testing
capabilities. This equipment can simulate live traffic loading on
soil subgrades under different suction conditions. A
large-scale testing chamber with 100 KN load cell capacity is
available at UTA for testing strength. Finite element modeling
software like ABACUS and PLAXIS and finite difference modeling
software such as FLAC are readily available.